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Monthly Archives: March 2014

What is this elusive groove of which people speak? I think a lot of aspects of music appreciation happen whether consciously or not on a deeply personal level so one listener’s Grateful Dead may be another’s Phish. A groove is not simply when all of the characters, parts, fall into synchronous orbit….it’s hard to describe but I’m going to give it a shot. When you listen to a track like “Papa Don’t Take No Mess” by James Brown you cannot help but move. It may be a twitch, a tic, a barely noticeable head bob but I defy any human to not feel the groove of this tune. A possible indication of groove is that I missed the song when it was over.

The Meters get into the groove, regularly. Dig “Cissy Strut” if you don’t believe me

It’s instrumental music but I find myself in the land of the tune…..it’s like reading a great book and you find yourself immersed in the surroundings, smells, history of the story so much so that when you have to get off the subway you’re at odds with the rest of the world. Groove is transformative and transportive. You can tell when the groove has not been established….if you find the music repetitive or boring, odds are whomever is playing has failed to achieve the “groove”. One may mistakenly think the burden of the groove rests squarely on the drummers shoulders, not so. Even a solo guitar player can establish a groove. Groove does not have to be funky (though it often is). I think John Fahey establishes a groove here.

I think it’s no coincidence the way a needle rides in the groove of a record. It bounces along through dips and sways in the valleys of song (new lyric Lynch? mebbe). Dvorak has groove

I ran into Paul at the An Beal Bocht open mic this past Tuesday. I had heard him play originals and a Big Star cover once (this Tuesday it was a Wilco song). We chatted a bit and his description of how he writes songs intrigued me hence our interview today, enjoy!

Mornin’ Paul here are some questions (thanks again for doing this)

1.When did you start writing your own songs?
I was 17 years old, and had learned three songs: Seal’s “Crazy,” “Leaving on A Jet Plane,” and “More Than Words.” At that point, I figured I had enough chords that I could start stringing them together in different ways. One night, I was feeling depressed like teenagers get, and I wrote, basically, a suicide note in the form of a song. After I wrote it, though, I felt better, and took the cue that maybe that was a better thing to do with my time than the Self-Pity Wallow (a dance I’d perfected by then.) I wrote 50 awful songs in my senior year, and like 2 OK ones.

2.Do you have a favorite band? If it’s too tough to whittle down give me your top 3 (currently)
Elvis Costello is my alpha and omega, but I listen to him less these days than I did in my angry twenties. I’d say the top three songwriters that duke it out for my attention are Patty Griffin, Freedy Johnston, and Nina Persson (The Cardigans, A Camp). I also love and obsess over Jellyfish, a band that put out two albums in the ’90s. Amazing band, amazing songs.

3.Do you have an album of your own? Music available online? Where?
I have released a total of 11 things, about three of which are currently available online. You can get Glutton’s Dozen (1999), Boy Meets Girl (2008), and Here Goes Nothing (2011) at all the digital music stops, as well as at paultab.bandcamp.com. I have a youtube channel at youtube.com/strumcrystrum, where I have a variety of stuff, from live stuff to lyric videos to a fan-programmed cover series I do called The Song Monkey. I’m also working on a new album, Two People Made This Mess, that I hope to release in the summer.

4.You have a great voice, were you in choir as a kid?
Thank you! I wasn’t. I took voice lessons for a few years in Pittsburgh after a girlfriend bought me a month’s worth of lessons, to see if I wanted to try it out. My coach’s name is Beth Claussen — she’s amazing! I was really worried about going to a vocal coach at first, that she’d make me sound like an opera singer, but what a good one will do is help train out all of the quirks and affectations that you’ve acquired from your influences (I used to be really into Barenaked Ladies, so I sounded like Cat Stevens trying to sing Elvis Costello songs as Steven Page, like, all the time), and then to find your own voice by finding your limits and gradually stretching them. She was a huge help.

5.Have you studied music in school?
I’m self-taught, for the most part, but I went to a performing arts high school (CAPA, in Pitttsburgh) with a music department that was tolerant and welcoming of my use of their facilities. I was a theatre major, but every study hall or free period I could get, they would let me use their studios to just hammer away at stuff, and to practice recording with their four-track. The head of the department signed me up for my first talent show, and lent me hundreds of dollars’ worth in equipment to take home over spring break and record an album (it was AWFUL, but it was fun to make).

6.Would you describe your process of writing a song?
I’ve gone through phases, but these days it’s very much a wait-and-see process. Songs occur to me most often when I’m taking walks — sometimes they’ll source themselves from melodies I’ve hummed while strumming at home, but usually when they come it’s without a guitar line in mind. This way, I can free myself a little from the 1-4-5 thing and play around with the way the melodies dance. I’d say when the first hit of inspiration comes, I get a verse and maybe a chorus. Then I sit on it.

If the next day, or a few days later, it comes back, I start to think a little harder about second verses. Once that’s broken, I’m pretty much ready, but I like bridges and I try for them, so:

I take a shower, and I sing the verses and choruses through in the shower. Whatever self-consciousness I have about singing them on the street falls away and generally whatever pops out of my mouth next, whether it has a lyric attached to it or not, is the melody I want to go to for the bridge. Then, more walking and waiting.

You really never know when the dots are going to connect. The line in Astoria, “I’m a boy and life is messy, I was bound to make a few mistakes,” came to me while I was getting a root canal. You just have to keep your mind open, all the time, and let your brain do its thing.

In any case, after all that is done, I take it home and learn it on the guitar. The guitar is such a freeing instrument in so many ways, and facilitates so many writers, but at some point, you have to learn how to override the settings that you program in from using certain progressions, because otherwise, those progressions will keep your melodies in the same box, or your melodies won’t sound right over the chords your comfortable with. Bringing the songs fully written to the guitar, though, forces you to do a little extra work to find the chords that serve your melody. The songs get stronger for that.

The end result is that I’m less prolific but way more consistent, and stronger than I used to be.

7.Do you buy music at a record store? Online? CDs? Vinyl?
I buy vinyl at a record store. I’ve been diving into the seventies lately, because I’ve been watching all of these documentaries that have hipped me to what was going on back then musically, and it’s been a great journey, one that I traverse through Spotify, that generally culminates in vinyl purchases once I find the albums I can obsess over. I recently bought a copy of Curtis Mayfield’s Roots with the Curtom label on it, which sits with pride alongside a Sussex release of Bill Withers’ Just As I Am that I got for five bucks at Silvana. I’ve been looking for a copy of Merry Clayton’s “Keep Your Eye On The Sparrow,” a stunner of an album that I suspect saw more space in the landfills than on shelves, but I play it on Spotify, like, constantly.

I buy CDs at live shows, or trade them with other performers, but usually when I buy music, it’s digitally. iTunes has horrible aspects to it in the post-Jobs era — their focus on DRM is so insane that they actually delete files from your library that they don’t recognize as their own — but the Cloud aspects I like. I like the idea that I won’t have to transfer files from computer to computer for future purchases, they’ll just, you know, be around.

I do still love vinyl, though, because as far as the physical aspect of owning something goes, that’s the greatest. You have a big ol’ picture, you’ve got these liner notes, it’s so tactile. I probably love vinyl for stupid reasons that are the same as the people who still love books that I make fun of, but if there’s one thing not to let go of in this world, it’s vinyl records. I really hope to put one out someday — maybe this next album will find a vinyl label!

8.What’s the last show you saw and where?
The last show I saw was at An Beal Bocht: it was the Steamboats, and they were awesome. One mic, four guys, sweet arrangements, just flawless execution. The last “professional” show was an anniversary present from my fiancée, and that was Kanye West at Barclays with A Tribe Called Quest opening. Supposedly, it was the last Tribe show, and that’s why it was truly important to me — those guys were the first hip-hop band that really mattered to me, and that whole Native Tongue kurass was a gift to humanity — and they didn’t disappoint. Busta Rhymes showed up for his verses on Scenario, it was transcendental; he was jumping up and down on Kanye’s stage, bouncing the whole thing like he was gonna break it. Kanye’s show was weird and beautiful and also weird. I love him and the show was a blast but, and maybe this is me being old, I like listening to him more than I cared about the big mountain and the dancers. His set-up was so loud that his lyrics were indistinguishable, and even his rant was hard to make out from the “cheap” seats. I’d really like to see him play a show like LL Cool J’s unplugged, where he gets a full band to pull off all the samples he uses live, and the mix is chill enough that he can let his words ring out. That, I would pay $150 to see again.

Showing up early to shows has grown my appreciation of NYC music greatly — staying late after a Madison Square Gardeners show at Rockwood 2, I got to see Harper Blynn for the first time. The next time I showed up to see Harper Blynn, I walked in on the tail end of Lucius’ set, and heard three songs, the first of which was “Turn It Around,” fully three years before it became the huge AAA hit it is today (they called it “Comatose” back then — “Go Home” used to be called “Dolly.” I am a nerd.) Going to see Lucius at Moscov Gallery, I was turned on to Pearl and the Beard. I think I heard Sydney Wayser for the first time because I hung around after doing my first show at Googie’s, to see who was playing in the Living Room. I buy these people’s albums when they come out, and listen to them constantly. Coming to Beal Bocht on random Sunday nights has been rewarding too, most recently with my discovery of the Steamboats. There just is no better delivery format for music than live performance, and if it’s affordable and close, I’m on it.

9.What’s your favorite NYC venue to see a show? To play?
Rockwood Stage 3 is fantastic — they’ve got a quiet, quaint little set-up going down there. If you go into Rockwood 1 and see that the tables are gone, well, they’re down in Stage 3 now. I also love going to the Scratcher, an Irish bar in the village that has a weekly session. They use one of those Bose sticks for an amplifier, and it sounds great in that room, which is one of those charming lower-level brownstone joints that you have to go down a few stairs to go into. On the playing side, I’ve been getting a lot of great support from the team at Silvana and Shrine in Harlem, and their sound and stage system is unparalleled in NYC. They love good music, and I’ve never seen a mediocre act there before or after me.

Still, right now, my favorite place to go see and play music is An Beal Bocht, and that’s all about the way they respect and support their artists. Like many places in NYC, Bocht relies on tips from their patrons to pay their musicians. Unlike these places, however, they make a point of getting everybody’s attention, like, shushing the room, and giving them a spiel about the fact that the money that goes in the basket is the only money we get. They then go around and hold the basket at each table, patiently waiting for people to either decline or get their wallets out and pony up. I did a gig the other night at another place where the waitress took the tip bucket, without ceremony, and walked straight to the back of the room and straight back to the front without stopping: it had $4 in it. I mentioned that the tip bucket was on the stage and ended up with about $40. For the next band, she did the same thing, so I picked up the bucket and walked it around, and I saw 20s fall in, so that’s the kind of money I lost because the waitress didn’t care enough. I also played a gig recently where there was no waitress, just the bartender and the soundguy, and when I asked the soundguy, who had just told me my set was the best he’d heard in a long time, and thanked me for it, if the bucket had been passed, he said, “Uh, NO. I don’t, you know, DO that. You can, though, if you want to.” Respect plays a big role in whether I go back to a club or not.

10.Do you read music reviews online and do you find them useful in any way?
Opinions are like hamburgers — you can get one anywhere, but the shit content depends on the source. What I do these days is listen to Spotify a lot, and every day I click on the “New Releases” tab and play at least one track from everything I see, to see if anything grabs me. Once I get really into something, it will result in a fear-based iTunes purchase (I’m always worried that all of the content will disappear off Spotify in the middle of the night and I’ll have to buy everything at once), or a dive through the used-vinyl troughs if it’s older stuff. I read the AV Club’s reviews sometimes, and they point me in some good directions, but mostly I like just discovering stuff that way or by going to live shows.

There you have it! Check Paul Tabachneck out online, buy his albums, and if you see him live just say “hi”!

When I began playing out regularly back in ’99, heh sayeth the ol’ codger, I exclusively and almost adamantly played original songs. My thinking about cover songs was, hey those songs are already in the world if people want to hear what they already know they can put on the album and be satisfied right away. It was during the Keenan’s Open mic hosted by Orville Davis when he played ‘Whiter Shade of Pale’, the classic Procol Harum song that I understood what is enjoyable about hearing and playing cover songs. First off Orville is a honky tonk, country, and rock player which already affected how the tune was going to sound, no less felt or enjoyable but with his unique stamp. So the effect is twofold, 1. oh I recognize that tune (people like to feel comfortable) and 2. oh this is the live persons take/interpretation of that tune. Not being the brightest bulb in the house I launched into playing covers of music I really dug, Sparklehorse, Tom Waits, Flaming Lips, Neutral Milk Hotel, Elliott Smith…bands who are known but in my neighborhood, at that time, I was undercutting the positive effect of “oh I recognize that song!” (not among the musicians but the audience). A classic example of covers working is Jimi Hendrix version of Bob Dylan’s “All Along The Watchtower”. Working, I might add, to such an extent that Hendrix version may be the better known.

I am going to be playing an event hosted by
Taylor Rich this Monday March 3rd at An Beal Bocht 445 West 238th St. in the Bronx featuring the songs of Cat Stevens and The Carpenters. I will be covering a Cat Stevens tune, ‘Trouble’